DISPLAYING THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC: NEW EXHIBITIONS IN THE BERLIN MUSEUM LANDSCAPE By Jennifer Salemann Submitted to Central European University Department of History In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Supervisor: Professor Constantin Iordachi Second Reader: Professor Carsten Wilke CEU eTD Collection Budapest, Hungary 2015 Statement of Copyright Copyright in the text of this thesis rests with the Author. Copies by any process, either in full or part, may be made only in accordance with the instructions given by the Author and lodged in the Central European Library. Details may be obtained from the librarian. This page must form a part of any such copies made. Further copies made in accordance with such instructions may not be made without the written permission of the Author. CEU eTD Collection i Abstract This thesis explores competing memory discourses of life in East Germany as represented in recent additions to Berlin’s museum landscape. The thesis employs a comparative methodological approach to three case studies: the privately operated DDR Museum; the state-sponsored Museum in der Kulturbrauerei; and the joint private-state administered Stasi Museum. The circumstances surrounding each exhibition’s creation, revision or expansion attest to the prominent role of the German federal government in shaping GDR commemoration through truth commissions and historical foundations alongside the influence of non-state actors. The purpose of this thesis is to analyze how each museum’s particular historiographical and curatorial strategies contribute to competing representations of life in East Germany created for a broad public audience. I ask the following questions of each exhibition. 1) Whose history is told? 2) How is this history told? 3) For what purpose is this history told? My primary sources include the published promotional and catalog materials, narrative explanatory texts, documentary evidence, and various media of each exhibition, as well as interviews conducted with museum staff. The findings of this thesis demonstrate that historical consensus appears to be forming in the museum community regarding what GDR historical content must receive attention within their exhibitions—namely an integrated approach that acknowledges both everyday life history and the history of the SED dictatorship. However, the landscape remains diverse with respect to curatorial strategy and the affective posture encouraged for visitors. An CEU eTD Collection analysis of the discourses represented in the unique communicative space of these museum environments not only makes a contribution to the study of the historicization of East Germany in particular, but also reflects upon the shifting form and content of contemporary history museum practice. ii Acknowledgements I would like to thank my supervisor, Professor Constantin Iordachi, my second reader, Professor Carsten Wilke, and the CEU History Department for their steadfast encouragement and eager willingness to guide me through this scholarly endeavor. I would also like to thank my family and friends for supporting me throughout this deeply challenging and rewarding experience. CEU eTD Collection iii Table of Contents Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 1 Chapter 1: Memory Discourses and New Museum Practice .......................................... 6 1.1 Memory in the Museum ................................................................................................. 7 1.2 Characteristics of Contemporary History Museums and New Museum Practice .......... 9 1.3 Competing GDR Memory Discourses ......................................................................... 12 1.3.1 Memory Discourse of Unrechtsstaat ........................................................................ 13 1.3.2 Memory Discourse of Ostalgie ................................................................................. 14 1.3.3 Memory Discourse of Contradiction ......................................................................... 17 Chapter 2: Historical Context—The Evolution of GDR Commemoration ................ 20 2.1 The Unique Case of Germany: Divided and United .................................................... 20 2.2 Germany’s “Second Dictatorship” ............................................................................... 22 2.3 Legislating Commemoration from Above ................................................................... 24 2.3.1 Germany’s Inquiry Commissions and Memorial Concept ........................................ 24 2.3.2 The Sabrow Commission .......................................................................................... 26 2.4 The Berlin GDR Museum Landscape Pre- and Post-Unification ................................ 29 2.4.1 Museums and Memorials of Repression in Berlin .................................................... 29 2.4.2 National History Museums ........................................................................................ 31 2.4.3 Everyday Life Museums ........................................................................................... 34 2.4.4 Recent Developments ................................................................................................ 35 Chapter 3. New Museum Exhibition Case Studies ....................................................... 37 3.1 The Stasi Museum – A Joint Effort at Public Justice ................................................... 37 3.1.1 The BStU Exhibition ................................................................................................. 39 3.1.2 The ASTAK Exhibition ............................................................................................ 43 3.2 The DDR Museum – An Entrepreneurial Approach through Playfulness ................... 47 3.3 The Kulturbrauerei Museum–A State-Sponsored Multi-Perspectival Approach ........ 54 Conclusion ......................................................................................................................... 62 Bibliography ..................................................................................................................... 65 CEU eTD Collection iv Introduction “The question is not only what is remembered by whom but also how and why it is remembered” Silke Arnold-de Simine1 Twenty-five years after its disappearance from the political map of Europe, the German Democratic Republic (GDR) now has a firm presence in the exhibitions of Germany’s contemporary history museums. The evolution of GDR museums in Germany after 1989/90 has been heavily influenced by the federal government of united Germany in the form of multiple truth commissions, a federal Memorial Concept, and the creation of a number of political education and historical foundations charged with preserving the memory and legacy of the East German SED regime. 2 Parallel to the establishment of numerous state-supported memorials and museums, individuals and citizens’ groups in the private sphere developed their own exhibitions, thus diversifying the commemorative landscape. Visitors to Berlin now have over a dozen museum sites to choose from to learn about facets of life in the GDR, and these sites emphasize different memories of the GDR ranging the full spectrum from the traumatic to the nostalgic. To illustrate and investigate this spectrum of GDR memory, this thesis compares three GDR museums of diverse sponsorship located in Berlin. The co-state/citizens’ group administered Stasi Museum (opened 1990, most recent renovation 2015), the privately run DDR Museum (opened 2006, renovated 2010), and the state-sponsored CEU eTD Collection 1 Silke Arnold-de Simine, ed. Memory Traces: 1989 and the Question of German Cultural Identity. Cultural History and Literary Imagination Vol. 5 (Bern: Peter Lang AG, 2005), 11. 2 SED stands for Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutchlands (Socialist Unity Party of Germany). Created in 1946 through a merger between the Social Democrat and Communist parties of the Soviet Occupation Zone, the SED was the ruling party of the German Democratic Republic until 1990. See Mary Fulbrook, A History of Germany 1918-2014: The Divided Nation, 4th ed. (West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2015), 120. 1 Museum in der Kulturbrauerei (opened 2013) provide a wide sampling of historiographical and curatorial approaches to educating the public about the legacy of the GDR. 3 As this thesis will show, with so many museums already present in the commemorative landscape of Berlin, it is worthwhile to consider what forces are behind the creation of further or expanded exhibitions. This thesis argues that due to state efforts to guide commemoration of the GDR, museum curators of the newest exhibitions reflect signs of convergence in that they simultaneously integrate repressive and everyday life aspects of East Germany into their exhibitions. However, this convergence is not a sign of total consensus, as the sponsors behind these museums have divergent museological strategies and institutional missions—i.e. a different “how and why” as Arnold-de Simine put it—for their particular representation of the GDR. Literature Review The interdisciplinary literature on GDR museums in English is a small but growing corpus including contributions from scholars active in a range of fields including social and political history, cultural history, urban studies and museum studies. Dirk Verheyen provides a thorough
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